Select Local Merchants

Perfect for a casual night out with friends, Flying Saucer Draught Emporium offers traditional American fare in a laid-back setting.
Low-fat food isn t on the menu, so diners come to Flying Saucer Draught Emporium to enjoy their every bite.
Guests can migrate to the bar section to catch the game on the TV.
Take the kids along too — Flying Saucer Draught Emporium is a great spot for families with food that even little ones will love.
Seating is readily available at Flying Saucer Draught Emporium for those with large parties.
Patio tables and chairs are ready for Flying Saucer Draught Emporium diners who prefer their meals al fresco.
Flying Saucer Draught Emporium guests enjoy a taste of live music with their food as well.
It tends to get especially busy on weeknights, so be sure to call ahead and make a reservation.
Put the suit away when heading to Flying Saucer Draught Emporium — dress is casual, as are the vibes.
If you're driving, be sure to take advantage of the nearby lot.
Flying Saucer Draught Emporium makes it their goal to serve food that is both delicious and affordable.
For a quick and easy payment solution at Flying Saucer Draught Emporium, pay by major credit card.
Flying Saucer Draught Emporium dishes up breakfast, lunch, and dinner, so stop by for your favorite meal.

Load up on toppings or opt for a simple slice of cheese at Rizzi's Pizza Cafe, Arlington's classic pizza venue.
No need to miss out on Rizzi's Pizza Cafe just because you are avoiding fat or gluten. The pizzeria has loads of options that can accommodate your dietary needs.
If you're heading to the pizzeria on a Friday or Saturday, don't get stuck in line with the rest of the crowds — reservations are accepted.
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Prices at Rizzi's Pizza Cafe are a bargain (usually less than $15 for a meal), so you'll have plenty of cash left over to treat a friend (or two).
You can pay with Visa, Mastercard, Discover, American Express or any major credit card.
Stop by for three square meals a day — Rizzi's Pizza Cafe serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Built in 1928, the historic Orpheum Theatre Memphis once housed top-tier vaudeville shows in its opulent interior, which wowed audiences with monumental chandeliers, lush tapestries, and a Mighty Wurlitzer pipe organ. After the decline of vaudeville, the Orpheum gradually succumbed to age and a hailstorm of acorns tossed by delinquent squirrels, before a $5 million restoration project in 1982 returned the theater back to its former glory days. Now the crown jewel of Memphis' entertainment venues, the Orpheum's revived interior reminds audiences of the beautiful excess of the Roaring Twenties while hosting a nonstop schedule of concerts, Broadway shows, and ballets.

The Memphis Symphony Orchestra has been breaking strings and the hearts of screaming fans since its inception in 1952. Three of the four scheduled performances will resonate throughout the elegantly crafted Cannon Center. The architecturally stunning venue will host Mozart's Requiem in a performance guest-conducted by Ward Stare and dedicated to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The Requiem, a piece written in Mozart's last days, will run on April 10 at 8 p.m. at the Cannon Center. On April 11, the intimate 900-seat Germantown Performing Arts Centre will host a matinee encore of Mozart's Requiem at 2:30 p.m.

Providing a stage for bands of roaming musicians to ply their melodic wares, Hi-Tone Café also feeds hordes of Memphis's hungry with its wide-ranging
menu. Start things off with a Middle Eastern staple, hummus and a handmade pita ($4), or go for the gustatory gold of upstate New York with nine hot wings plus celery and carrots ($7). Six-ounce burgers ($6) use beef from local Neola Farms, except for the handmade veggie burger, which eschews meats both domestic and foreign for oats, veggies, soy, and sesame. The New York–style cheese pizza (slice $2.50/small $9.50/large $12.50) pays homage to sewer-dwelling, martial-arts-competent teenage reptiles whose genetic mutations make pizza their only digestible option, while eclectic topping posses grace the varied house specialty pizzas (slice $4/small $13/large $16). The barbecue pizza puts grilled chicken or pulled pork in barbecue sauce instead of marinara, and the Greek pie is comprised of eggplant, artichoke, roasted red peppers, and feta cheese. Toppings ($.50 per topping for a slice/$1 per topping for a small/ $2 per topping for a large) such as bacon and Roma tomato can be annexed and terminated at will, unlike tenancy on Russia's first mandatory moon colony.

Every year, the Levitt Shell hosts more than 50 free outdoor concerts. Past performers have included Elvis Presley—it was the site of his first professional show—, Al Green, and Jerry Lee Lewis. Today, the lineup is just as strong: local and national acts regularly take the spotlight, and music-themed films light up the screen beneath the summer stars.